The contemporary turn in Hanoi, Vietnam, 1989-2002 : Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, Salon Natasha, and doi moi-in-art

This dissertation argues that between 1989 and 2002, in the early years of doi moi economic renovation enacted in 1986 in Vietnam, the Hanoi art scene saw radical transformation as modern art became contemporary. Shift was spearheaded, it proposes, by an academically overlooked Hanoi vanguard, in pa...

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Main Author: Lenzi, Iola Gllian Louise
Other Authors: Sujatha Arundathi Meegama
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144954
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1449542023-03-11T20:02:39Z The contemporary turn in Hanoi, Vietnam, 1989-2002 : Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, Salon Natasha, and doi moi-in-art Lenzi, Iola Gllian Louise Sujatha Arundathi Meegama School of Art, Design and Media sujathameegama@ntu.edu.sg Visual arts and music::General::History Humanities::Literature This dissertation argues that between 1989 and 2002, in the early years of doi moi economic renovation enacted in 1986 in Vietnam, the Hanoi art scene saw radical transformation as modern art became contemporary. Shift was spearheaded, it proposes, by an academically overlooked Hanoi vanguard, in particular Vu Dan Tan and Nguyen Van Cuong, who, with a few other artists, congregated in Hanoi’s first experimental art space, Salon Natasha. To date, the contemporary turn in Vietnamese art has attracted scant academic regard. Dominant scholarship inside and outside Vietnam accounting for art of the doi moi-1990s describes any changes as restrained; or, when considering Vietnamese contemporary art, places the latter’s emergence later, after the Vietnam penetration of global contemporary art, at the turn of the millennium. My thesis challenges these views. Focusing on under-researched 1990s artworks by Vu Dan Tan and Nguyen Van Cuong, it discloses these pieces as crucial linchpins of the contemporary turn, and locates them in Vietnamese art history. My study shows Hanoi vanguard development of new artistic methods that departed then standard painting styles to engage the contemporary condition. It reveals how achieving innovation with little knowledge of global contemporary practices, Tan, Cuong, and their colleagues expanded the confines of modern Vietnamese art to create contemporary art, a body I identify as doi moi-in-art for expressive alterations as revolutionary as doi moi itself. My study explores the contemporary turn’s connection with artistic negotiation of social reality as, in the wake of doi moi, the old economic order ceded to the new. Having evoked the mainstream that the vanguard departed, my study accounts for vanguard material expansion, alternative modes of circulation, and interdisciplinarity whereby images integrated text, arguing these innovations were tied to social context. It uncovers how and why artworks transformed local codes associated with the village to produce conceptually-based aesthetic languages that involved audiences in critical debate. It establishes how pieces by Tan and Cuong, grappling with the reception of market socialism (or what the artists termed capitalism) in Vietnam, fostered critical idioms. It ends by analysing academically-neglected Salon Natasha to establish the foundational role of the space in Vietnamese art history both as site, and idea. Through hitherto-untapped primary and archival sources on four continents, this thesis demonstrates how 1990s vanguard idioms of Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, and their colleagues dialogued with the social dynamics of the period to generate contemporary art in Hanoi, and expand the Southeast Asian and global modern. Doctor of Philosophy 2020-12-07T01:16:14Z 2020-12-07T01:16:14Z 2020 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Lenzi, I. G. L. (2020). The contemporary turn in Hanoi, Vietnam, 1989-2002 : Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, Salon Natasha, and doi moi-in-art. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144954 10.32657/10356/144954 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Visual arts and music::General::History
Humanities::Literature
spellingShingle Visual arts and music::General::History
Humanities::Literature
Lenzi, Iola Gllian Louise
The contemporary turn in Hanoi, Vietnam, 1989-2002 : Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, Salon Natasha, and doi moi-in-art
description This dissertation argues that between 1989 and 2002, in the early years of doi moi economic renovation enacted in 1986 in Vietnam, the Hanoi art scene saw radical transformation as modern art became contemporary. Shift was spearheaded, it proposes, by an academically overlooked Hanoi vanguard, in particular Vu Dan Tan and Nguyen Van Cuong, who, with a few other artists, congregated in Hanoi’s first experimental art space, Salon Natasha. To date, the contemporary turn in Vietnamese art has attracted scant academic regard. Dominant scholarship inside and outside Vietnam accounting for art of the doi moi-1990s describes any changes as restrained; or, when considering Vietnamese contemporary art, places the latter’s emergence later, after the Vietnam penetration of global contemporary art, at the turn of the millennium. My thesis challenges these views. Focusing on under-researched 1990s artworks by Vu Dan Tan and Nguyen Van Cuong, it discloses these pieces as crucial linchpins of the contemporary turn, and locates them in Vietnamese art history. My study shows Hanoi vanguard development of new artistic methods that departed then standard painting styles to engage the contemporary condition. It reveals how achieving innovation with little knowledge of global contemporary practices, Tan, Cuong, and their colleagues expanded the confines of modern Vietnamese art to create contemporary art, a body I identify as doi moi-in-art for expressive alterations as revolutionary as doi moi itself. My study explores the contemporary turn’s connection with artistic negotiation of social reality as, in the wake of doi moi, the old economic order ceded to the new. Having evoked the mainstream that the vanguard departed, my study accounts for vanguard material expansion, alternative modes of circulation, and interdisciplinarity whereby images integrated text, arguing these innovations were tied to social context. It uncovers how and why artworks transformed local codes associated with the village to produce conceptually-based aesthetic languages that involved audiences in critical debate. It establishes how pieces by Tan and Cuong, grappling with the reception of market socialism (or what the artists termed capitalism) in Vietnam, fostered critical idioms. It ends by analysing academically-neglected Salon Natasha to establish the foundational role of the space in Vietnamese art history both as site, and idea. Through hitherto-untapped primary and archival sources on four continents, this thesis demonstrates how 1990s vanguard idioms of Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, and their colleagues dialogued with the social dynamics of the period to generate contemporary art in Hanoi, and expand the Southeast Asian and global modern.
author2 Sujatha Arundathi Meegama
author_facet Sujatha Arundathi Meegama
Lenzi, Iola Gllian Louise
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Lenzi, Iola Gllian Louise
author_sort Lenzi, Iola Gllian Louise
title The contemporary turn in Hanoi, Vietnam, 1989-2002 : Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, Salon Natasha, and doi moi-in-art
title_short The contemporary turn in Hanoi, Vietnam, 1989-2002 : Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, Salon Natasha, and doi moi-in-art
title_full The contemporary turn in Hanoi, Vietnam, 1989-2002 : Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, Salon Natasha, and doi moi-in-art
title_fullStr The contemporary turn in Hanoi, Vietnam, 1989-2002 : Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, Salon Natasha, and doi moi-in-art
title_full_unstemmed The contemporary turn in Hanoi, Vietnam, 1989-2002 : Vu Dan Tan, Nguyen Van Cuong, Salon Natasha, and doi moi-in-art
title_sort contemporary turn in hanoi, vietnam, 1989-2002 : vu dan tan, nguyen van cuong, salon natasha, and doi moi-in-art
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144954
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